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PrimaVision is the early ancestor of today’s Primavera P6 Web Access client. With the 2002 release of version 3.0, PrimaVision was the beginning of a strategic shift towards a totally web-based enterprise project portfolio solution. Responding to the increasing demand for browser-based enterprise systems, Primavera wasted no time in building out the web-based side of the product. Primavera quickly rebadged the tool Primavera P3/e and then Primavera TeamPlay the latter being the IT flavor of the system for the emerging popularity of projectizing IT shops.
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#Primavera p3 p3e software#
Not too surprising therefore that Primavera acquired Eagle Ray Software Systems in 1999. Interestingly, the Eagle Ray tool’s interface looked a lot like Primavera’s P3. Eagle Ray’s only real competition at the time was Artemis, with their Artemis Views suite and Welcom Software’s Open Plan. Very few of these ever managed to make the leap to a true enterprise solution and some no longer exist today. Up to this point, most of the “enterprise” offerings on the market were from vendors of desktop tools that had re-engineered or rebadged their products as enterprise systems. set up shop in New York State and set about building a true enterprise project management software solution. Its roots go back to 1996 when a small company named Eagle Ray Software Systems, Inc. Well, no danger of that with Primavera P6. You’d like to be sure you’re dealing with a mature product and that you’re not going to be beta testing it for the manufacturer during your implementation. I’m sometimes asked how long Primavera P6 has been on the market and what I know about its history.